Trent Reznor's been lying to us, but his fans probably won't mind. The singer, producer and composer announced on Nine Inch Nails' Tumblr today that his band (which he laid to rest in 2009) has completed a new album and has signed to Columbia. Nine Inch Nails had previously announced a return to touring (with a lineup of past NIN collaborators and members of King Crimson and Telefon Tel Aviv), headlining major American fests including Lollapalooza and Outside Lands. But his Tumblr note is Reznor's first hint of new NIN music since 2008's "The Slip.

The total revenue generated by e-book sales in the U.S. in 2012 was $3.04 billion, a 44.2% increase over the year before. That gain was announced in the preliminary year-end report released Wednesday by BookStats, a joint statistics project between the Assn. of American Publishers and the Book Industry Study Group. In 2012, e-book sales accounted for 20% of trade book sales revenue. Overall, trade book sales rose 6.9%. Trade books are those found in brick-and-mortar bookstores and online retail booksellers.

Disney is plunging back into familiar waters, announcing a November 2015 sequel to "Finding Nemo" titled "Finding Dory. " Enthusiasts of the 2003 finned favorite will recall Dory as the friendly, slightly amnesiac tang voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, who'll return to voice the title character. News of a sequel had been known for some time, but the announcement Tuesday clarifies the focus, title and release date (exact day, Nov. 25). Andrew Stanton, who directed the 2003 hit-cum-animated-Oscar winner, is returning behind the camera.

When Noomi Rapace and Niels Arden Oplev first met to discuss adapting the bestselling "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" nearly five years ago, one filmmaker's name kept coming up. "We talked about movies that inspired us, and it always came back to 'Zodiac' and David Fincher," the Swedish-born actress, 33, said in a joint interview last week with the Danish-born Oplev, 51. "It was a little strange. " It's not lost on the duo that Fincher would later helm the English-language remake of their Swedish-language thriller.

Hopes for “The Girl Who Played With Fire,” a potential follow-up to David Fincher's English-language “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” slowed considerably after the first movie performed only decently at the box office. But star Daniel Craig says he hasn't given up on the possibility of a new installment - and in fact hopes to persuade the director to return. “Of course I'll embrace [the movie], especially if Fincher does it,” Craig told The Times, adding, “I'm definitely going to work on him.” Fincher, who has a range of projects in development, has been publicly noncommittal about returning to the franchise, which follows a Swedish-language art-house hit. The director has never made a sequel in his long career.

In the chess game that is holiday movie releasing, someone had to lay down their queen. And this morning, Warner Bros. did just that, yanking Baz Luhrmann's “The Great Gatsby” from its scheduled Christmas Day release and moving it to next summer. Whatever the reasons for the switch, the postponement takes the star-studded 3-D update on the F. Scott Fitzgerald classic out of Oscar contention for this year and also frees up the Christmas calendar -- sort of. Even with the move, the 2012 Christmas movie period is one of the most crowded in recent memory, and perhaps ever.

Click here to download TV listings for the week of July 8 - 14 in PDF format TV listings for the week of July 8 - 14 in PDF format are also available here This week's TV Movies SERIES NYC 22: Training officer Daniel "Yoda" Dean (Terry Kinney) recalls his own days as a rookie on a new episode of the police drama (8 p.m. CBS); another new episode follows at 9 p.m. The Firm: Mitch (Josh Lucas) and his team prepare for jury selection in the Walker case on a new episode of the legal drama (10 p.m. NBC)

Click here to download TV listings for the week of July 1 - 7 in PDF format TV listings for the week of July 1 - 7 in PDF format are also available here This week's TV Movies SUNDAY The irrepressible Nicki Minaj and the controversial Chris Brown are slated to perform at "The BET Awards 2012," the latest edition of the annual event celebrating African Americans in entertainment....

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has taken back full control of its legendary film label United Artists, is booking a loss on its recent release "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" and has added a top TV executive to its board of directors, the independent studio revealed in financial filings this week. Formed in 1919 by film luminaries including Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford, UA became part of MGM in 1981. In 2006, UA became a joint venture between MGM and Tom Cruise and his producing partner Paula Wagner, who together got 30% of the company.

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo Sony, $30.99; Blu-ray, $40.99 Director David Fincher and screenwriter Steven Zaillian adapt Stieg Larsson's bestseller "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" into a sophisticated and gripping thriller, sporting excellent lead performances by Daniel Craig as a disgraced reporter and Rooney Mara as a punk hacker. Larsson's story of a gruesome missing-person's case is gratuitously violent at times, and the film runs a little too long — in large part because it goes through about four endings before finally lurching to a stop.